A lawyer for the founder of embattled Dubai-based private equity group Abraaj said yesterday it is close to an out-of-court settlement in a case over bounced cheques for millions of dollars.
“Parties have reached an understanding last night. Now, they will put it in a document,” said Arif Naqvi’s lawyer, Habib al-Mulla.
“A provisional agreement has been reached over the main issues to repay the loan,” al-Mulla, the chief executive of law firm Baker McKenzie Habib al-Mulla, told AFP.
Essam al-Tamimi, a lawyer for creditor United Arab Emirates businessman Hamid Jaafar, confirmed the negotiations but without giving details.
A UAE court yesterday adjourned a ruling against the Pakistani founder of Abraaj, the region’s largest private equity firm, to allow a settlement, sources familiar with the case said.
A ruling has been postponed until July 11 against Naqvi, who faces up to three years in jail for issuing three cheques worth $300mn without having sufficient funds in the bank.
Financier Naqvi, 57, is currently outside the UAE after the public prosecutor issued a warrant for his arrest.
The bounced cheques case is one of several woes facing Naqvi’s group.
Founded in 2002 by Naqvi, Abraaj had nearly $14bn of assets under management before being granted a court-supervised restructuring last month in the Cayman Islands, where it is registered, following allegations of the misuse of funds.
The Cayman Islands court appointed liquidators to oversee an “orderly restructuring” of the group. Four key investors in a $1bn healthcare fund managed by Abraaj, including Bill and Melinda Gates and a World Bank affiliate, have demanded an inquiry into allegations that money from the fund had been misused.
That in turn triggered investor demands for their funds to be returned.
Abraaj had the funds to repay secured investors but could not repay unsecured investors.
The company categorically denied any wrongdoing.
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